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Welcome to Backmarch House BandB

Address: Norval Place, Inverkeithing, KY11 2RJ

Hotel Description

With scenic gardens, cooked breakfasts and free Wi-Fi, Backmarch House B&B is a 20-minute drive from Edinburgh centre. Built in 1829, the hotel is just 10 minutes’ drive from Dunfermline.
The colourful bedrooms at Backmarch each have a private bathroom and tea/coffee facilities. All rooms feature a TV and hairdryer, and ironing facilities are also available.
Backmarch House is from the Georgian period. It has original features and used to be a farmhouse. A traditional full Scottish breakfast is served daily in the spacious breakfast room. Continental and vegetarian options are also available.
Just 20 minutes’ drive from Edinburgh Airport, Backmarch House Bed and Breakfast is situated in Rosyth, 1.5 miles from Rosyth Ferry terminal. The M90 motorway is a 2-minute drive away.

Our Facilities

Vegetarian Food Available

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Attractions - Backmarch House BandB

Distance 2.8 miles (4.48 km)
Also known as DAFC, or the DA by local fans, and are nicknamed the Pars. Dunfermline were once managed by Jock Stein of Celtic and Scotland fame, and thanks to a good season in 2003/2004 they were back in Europe for the first time in 35 years when they were involved in the 2004/2005 UEFA Cup. In 2003 Dunfermline became the first European team to install a plastic artificial pitch at their East End Park stadium. The pitch was part of an experiment by UEFA to try and improve playing surfaces. In 2005 however, following a ruling by the Scottish Premier League, Dunfermline were forced to remove this surface and commence replacing it, with grass said to have originally been intented for Wembley Stadium.

Distance 4.75 miles (7.6 km)
When Dalmeny House was completed in 1817, it marked a great departure in Scottish architecture; its Tudor Gothic style, with its highly-decorated chimneys and crenellations, looked back toward fanciful 16th-century English mansions, such as Hampton Court. The house was designed by a University friend of the 4th Earl of Rosebery, William Wilkins, who would go on to design the National Gallery in London and much of King's College, Cambridge - parts of which closely resemble Dalmeny. With its Gothic Great Hall and corridor, its large, formal regency apartments and its sweeping views across the Firth of Forth, it is a house which combines comfort and romanticism, and which produced many imitations throughout Scotland.